The New Yorker, 1-Month Subscription

The New Yorker's blend of reporting, commentary, criticism, fiction, and cartoons has garnered 36 National Magazine Awards since its debut in 1925 - more than any other publication. Edited by Pulitzer Prize winner David Remnick, the magazine has had only five editors in its 80-year history. Each week, Audible and the editorial staff of The New Yorker work together to select a variety of the issue's best articles from The Talk of the Town, Fiction, The Critics, and more. Each article is read in its entirety. The New Yorker is available in audio exclusively at audible.com.

The New Yorker, 12-Month Subscription

The New Yorker's blend of reporting, commentary, criticism, fiction, and cartoons has garnered 36 National Magazine Awards since its debut in 1925 - more than any other publication. Edited by Pulitzer Prize winner David Remnick, the magazine has had only five editors in its 80-year history. Each week, Audible and the editorial staff of The New Yorker work together to select a variety of the issue's best articles from The Talk of the Town, Fiction, The Critics, and more. Each article is read in its entirety. The New Yorker is available in audio exclusively at audible.com.

In this issue: "Homage to Zenobia", by Lawrence Wright; "Room with a Boo", by Reeves Wiedeman; "Death of a Prosecutor", by Dexter Filkins; "The Really Big One", by Kathryn Schulz; and "Cold Cases", by Anthony Lane.

In this issue: "The Course of Happiness", by Louise Erdrich; "The Republic of Bad Taste", by Jonathan Franzen; "Love Is Blind and Deaf", by Jonathan Safran Foer; and "Battle Lines", by Robyn Creswell and Bernard Haykel.

"Lies", by Hendrik Hertzberg; "Head First", by Lauren Collins; "Who Knows Brooklyn?", by Ben McGrath; "Bench Press", by Jeffrey Toobin; "The Mask of Doom", by Ta-Nehisi Coates; "Attention, People of Earth", by Paul Simms; "Vermeer at the Met", by Peter Schjeldahl; and "Young Romantics", by David Denby

The New Yorker (Oct. 31, 2005)

"Saddam On Trial" by George Packer; "Capitol Gains" by James Surowiecki; "Breyer's Big Idea" by Jeffrey Toobin; "Recalled to Life" by Oliver Sacks; "The Children" by William Trevor; and "Troublemakers" by Anthony Lane.

The New Yorker: A Fiction Trio

The New Yorker: A Fiction Trio features short stories by three masters of the form: "Path Light" by Tom Drury: A carelessly tossed bottle nearly misses a man and his dog and begins a quest to find out who threw it; "Coping Stones" by Ann Beattie: A neighbor's secrets unsettle a small Maine town; "The View from Castle Rock" by Alice Munro: A family emigrates from Scotland to Canada in 1818 with visions of their lives in the new world.

"Back to the Square", by Wendell Steavenson; "Birds and Bankers", by Lizzie Widdicombe; "Puppet Reboot", by Michael Schulman; "The Power of Nothing", by Michael Specter; "Monday Night Lights", by Kelefa Sanneh; "I Spy", by Anthony Lane; and "Double Dare", by David Denby.

The New Yorker (Mar. 12, 2007)

"Remains of the Days" by Adam Gopnik; "Reasonable Panic" by James Surowiecki; "The Denialists" by Michael Specter; "Inappropriate" by Paul Rudnick; "The Unthinkable" by Steve Coll; and "Fear Factor" by Sasha Frere-Jones.

"Memorials", by Adam Gopnik; "Fish Story", by Elizabeth Kolbert; “Snip”, by Michael Schulman: Vidal Sassoon’s life in hair; "Sons of the Revolution", by Jon Lee Anderson; "O Pioneer Woman!", by Amanda Fortini; and "Wild at Heart", by John Lahr.